Reported Decision
Bain v. City of Springfield, 424 Mass. 758, 678
N.E.2d 155
Robin BAIN
v.
CITY OF SPRINGFIELD.
Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts, Hampden.
Argued Feb. 5, 1997.
Decided April 18, 1997.
City
employee sued city for sex discrimination and retaliation. A jury in the Superior Court
Department, Hampden County, Constance M. Sweeney, J., found for city on sex discrimination
claim and for employee on retaliation claim, found that employee suffered no actual
damages, but awarded $100,000 in punitive damages. City appealed. The Supreme Judicial
Court, Fried, J., transferred appeal on its own motion, and held that: (1)
antidiscrimination statute waived sovereign immunity; (2) Mayor's and supervisor's alleged
actions would have constituted threat or intimidation; (3) Mayor's response in local
newspaper did not constitute retaliation; and (4) improper factors were considered in
awarding punitive damages.
Remanded for reconsideration of damages.
*156 Edward M. Pikula, Assistant City Solicitor (Kathleen Tarpey Breck,
Assistant City Solicitor, with him), for defendant.
*157 Tani E. Sapirstein, Springfield, for plaintiff.
Harvey A. Schwartz, for American Civil Liberties Union of
Massachusetts.
Marisa A. Campagna, James E. Fitzgerald & Charles P. [424 Mass.
759] Wagner, Boston, for National Employment Lawyers Association, Massachusetts Chapter.
Before WILKINS, C.J., and O'CONNOR, LYNCH, FRIED and MARSHALL, JJ.
FRIED, Justice.
The plaintiff, Robin Bain, sought
damages under G.L. c. 151B, ' 4, from her employer, the city of Springfield, for
discriminating against her on the basis of sex and for retaliating against her for seeking
such relief. A jury found for the defendant on the sex discrimination claim and for the
plaintiff on her claim of retaliation. The jury found that the plaintiff had suffered no
actual damages, but awarded her $100,000 in punitive damages. The defendant appealed. We
transferred the appeal to this court on our own motion. We remand to the Superior Court
for reconsideration of damages.
I
The plaintiff had been employed since 1990 as plant superintendent at the
city of Springfield's waste water treatment plant. This was a position with considerable
responsibility, requiring her to manage technical, personnel, and budgetary matters. In
1992, the city posted the job of water department manager, and the plaintiff applied. She
was never interviewed for the position nor did anyone discuss it with her, although she
certainly met the qualifications for it. Shortly after applying, she learned from a
newspaper account that John Lyons had been appointed at a salary exceeding that stated in
the posting of the position. In his testimony, Mayor Robert Markel, the appointing
authority, indicated that he had known Lyons from his previous service as director of the
city's department of public works and had been impressed by his managerial skills and his
ability to work with other city and State agencies. When he learned that Lyons, who was
then working in the private sector, might be interested in again working for the city, he
entered into negotiations with him to persuade him to accept the posted position.
Believing that she had had no fair chance to compete, the plaintiff wrote a letter to the
mayor, complaining that the appointment of Lyons was "blatant discrimination."
She sent copies of this letter to the city's affirmative action and equal opportunity
(AA/EEO) officer and to her immediate supervisor, Philip Pike. Her letter concluded that
by sending a copy to the "City's AA/ EEO Officer" she was making a "claim
of discrimination based on [her] sex with regard to the appointment of a white male to the
position of Water Department manager," and that she [424 Mass. 760] expected an
answer within ten days. She never received an answer from Markel.
Shortly after receiving Bain's letter, Markel summoned Pike to his office. Markel
complained about the letter and said that "there had been a history of issues
involving Robin, this seemed to me to be the last straw, and I said something like 'Get
rid of her.' " (FN 1) When Pike next met with Bain, he reprimanded her for going over
his head in writing a letter directly to the mayor. He told her that the mayor wanted her
out of his administration, but in response to her question why he had not fired her, Pike
said that there was no reason to fire her and that she was a good employee. Bain also told
Pike that a reporter from a local newspaper had contacted her and that an article would
soon appear regarding the controversy.
Several days later the newspaper printed an article about Bain's letter and quoted her
directly. The article also gave Markel's account of his involvement in the Lyons
appointment, in which he defended himself against charges of discriminatory practices and
said that he thought Bain's complaint was "baseless," "meritless," and
"an example of someone trying to manipulate the civil *158 rights laws for personal
gain." The day before the newspaper account appeared, Bain wrote Markel a second
letter apologizing to him for criticizing him or questioning his legal authority and
Lyons's qualifications in her previous letter. The letter went on to say that Bain wanted
to withdraw her complaint filed with the AA/EEO officer. On the day the newspaper article
appeared, she wrote Markel a third letter to "say how sorry I am that this matter has
blown way out of proportion. "
The next day the mayor appeared at a previously scheduled visit to Bain's facility. Bain
testified that during that visit the mayor behaved in a "cold" manner toward her
and would not address remarks to her, "looked right through her" and addressed
remarks to her subordinate and to Pike, but not to her. In her testimony Bain offered a
second instance of such behavior at a meeting held some two months later: "I was the
last to speak and I have been observing his [Markel's] eye [424 Mass. 7611 contact,
listening, and responses. When it got to me, he would not look at me, and he discounted,
disregarded anything that I said.... [I]t was like I wasn't there. " She also
testified that after the conversation with Pike in which he rebuked her for writing her
first letter to the mayor, Pike "started to second-guess my decisions ... and just
didn't let me do the job that I had been doing. He changed the way he treated me in
letting me do my job ... [He] was, in my opinion, making it impossible for me to do the
job I had been doing, certainly to the caliber and quality that I had been doing it.
" Bain also testified that she developed certain physical symptoms as a result of
having been denied the director's job and her treatment by Markel and Pike.
Some three months after writing the letters, Bain took a position at higher pay with a
private firm in Springfield. Within a year she left that position for a higher paying
position in the waste water treatment field in another State.
One month after leaving her position with the city, she filed suit in the Superior Court,
alleging defamation, violation of G.L. c. 93, '
102 (equal rights act), sex discrimination in violation G.L. c. 15 1 B, ' 4(4), and retaliation in violation of ' 4(4A) for exercising her rights under that
provision. The equal rights and defamation counts were dismissed, and a jury found that
there had been no sex discrimination. The jury did find, however, that the defendant had
unlawfully retaliated against Bain. The jury found that Bain was not entitled to
compensatory damages for economic or emotional harm for the unlawful retaliation, but did
award punitive damages of $100,000.
At trial, the defendant moved to foreclose an award of punitive damages on the ground that
sovereign immunity had not been waived. At the close of the plaintiff's case, the
defendant moved for a directed verdict on the retaliation claim on the ground that the
plaintiff failed to prove retaliation as a matter of law. In this appeal the city renews
that argument. That issue is considered in part IIB of this opinion. The city goes on to
argue here that the punitive damages were excessive. This issue was fully briefed and
argued before us by both parties. We conclude that this further issue, which is considered
in parts IIC and III, is properly before us. In its motion for a directed verdict the
defendant argued that there was no evidence of objective adverse actions taken against the
[424 Mass. 762] plaintiff such as termination of employment and that the incidents of
retaliation adduced by the plaintiff were too subjective to be the basis of a retaliation
claim. This is sufficient to raise the issues joined by the parties here concerning the
sufficiency of the evidence to support a judgment of liability for the various incidents
of retaliation we consider in part IIB. In parts IIC and III we address the defendant's
argument that the punitive damages were excessive, although the defendant never made a
postverdict motion for reconsideration of damages. Once two of the three bases for a
finding of retaliation are removed, as we hold they are, the calculation of damages for
retaliation is necessarily undermined and its validity should be reevaluated. This is
particularly so where we consider punitive damages, which pass judgment on a whole course
of conduct. Moreover, the issue as to excessiveness of punitive damages and the
responsibility of trial and appellate courts to assure fairness *159 by exercising some
supervision over their imposition has come into much clearer focus since this case was
tried, as a result of the United States Supreme Court's decision (though we hold it has no
controlling force here) in BMW of No. Am. v. Gore, --- U.S - ----- ----- 116 S.Ct.
1589, 1595, 134 L.Ed.2d 809 (1996). As for the defendant's distinct argument that there
can be no punitive damages where no compensatory damages have been awarded, we comment on
it and reject it only so that we may dispose of the arguments briefed and argued before us
by the parties.
II
A
[1] [2] [3] The city is certainly correct that it is protected from
liability in this civil suit unless its sovereign immunity has been waived. Broadhurst
v. Director of the Div. of Employment Sec., 373 Mass. 720, 722, 369 N.E.2d 1018
(1977). This court confronted the common law doctrine of sovereign immunity most directly
in Whitney v. Worcester, 373 Mass. 208, 366 N.E.2d 1210 (1977). Reviewing the long
history of the doctrine in our courts, the maze of exceptions and qualifications to it,
its capacity to work injustice, and its increasingly anachronistic status in view of
judicial and legislative reactions in other States, we announced that, if the Legislature
did not act definitively to address the issue by the end of the next legislative session
we would abrogate the [424 Mass. 763] doctrine ourselves, leaving it to the Legislature
then to reinstate it in those circumstances in which it thought it properly applied. In
1978, the Legislature responded by passing the Massachusetts Tort Claims Act, G.L. c. 258.
Since that time we have stated that immunity is still in effect unless consent to suit has
been "expressed by the terms of a statute, or appears by necessary implication from
them. " C & M Constr. Co. v. Commonwealth, 396 Mass. 390, 392, 486 N.E.2d
54 (1985). There is no doubt that the antidiscrimination statute, G.L. c. 151B, the
statute on which the city's liability depends, waives the sovereign immunity of the
"Commonwealth and all political subdivisions ... thereof" by including them in
the statutory definition of persons and employers subject to the statute. G.L. c. 151B, ' 1 (1)
and (5). Moreover, the statute specifically provides for the award of "actual and
punitive damages." G.L. c. 151B, ' 9. The natural and ordinary reading of these provisions
is that the Commonwealth and its subdivisions are liable for punitive damages on the same
basis as other "persons" and "employers." Indeed, it is hard to
imagine how else the Legislature should have written this rather complex and lengthy
statute to include among its intended effects the result of subjecting the Commonwealth to
punitive as well as actual damages. Cf. Gares v. Willingboro Township, 90 F.3d 720
(3d Cir.1996) (New Jersey antidiscrimination statute defining employer to include
municipalities and generally authorizing punitive damages "allow[s] the award of
punitive damages against public entities").
The city seeks to escape this conclusion by pointing to the legislative history of G.L. c.
151B. The definitions of "person" and "employer" as including the
Commonwealth were present when the statute was first enacted in 1946, St.1946, c. 368, ' 4, and when it was expanded to include sex
discrimination in 1965, St.1965, c. 397, ''
1-7. The provision for punitive damages, G.L. c. 151B, ' 9, third par., however, was not added until 1989, St. 1989, c. 722, ' 31. The city buttresses this argument by
pointing out that in its initial reaction to our Worcester decision, the
Legislature, in passing G.L. c. 258, specifically precluded the award of punitive damages
in the causes of action allowed in that provision. (FN2) [424 Mass. 7641 (FN2) The city
argues that, in order to subject it to punitive damages the Legislature would have had to
state specifically in the newly enacted '
9, that the provisions in that section, or at least the provisions relating to punitive
damages, apply to the Commonwealth. Without such a statement, the city argues we cannot be
certain that the Legislature intended this result, which comes *160 from attaching the new
provisions to the already existing provisions. But this is a path we should not follow.
Although we do insist on a specific statement or clear implication before we take the
Legislature to have waived the immunity of the Commonwealth, see Woodbridge v.
Worcester State Hosp., 384 Mass. 38, 42, 423 N.E.2d 782 (1981) ("rules of
construction governing statutory waivers of sovereign immunity are stringent"), we
have never gone so far as to doubt that that was the Legislature's intention when the
statute, read in the ordinary way, says that it does just that. See id. (waiver of
sovereign immunity must be given effect where it is "expressed by the terms of a
statute, or appears by necessary implication from them"). (FN3)
B
[4] The city sought a directed verdict at the end of the
plaintiff's case and renewed the motion at the conclusion of all the evidence at which
time it was denied on the ground that there was sufficient evidence of retaliation.
Although the presence of retaliation is largely a factual matter and a jury determination
must be upheld if any evidence anywhere in the record supports it, MacCormack v. Boston
Edison Co., 423 Mass. 652, 659, 672 N.E.2d 1 (1996); cf. Poirier v. Plymouth, 374
Mass. 1424 Mass. 7651 206, 212, 372 N.E.2d 212 (1978), still in a matter such as this the
very concept of unlawful retaliation contains significant legal elements, and it may not
be simply relegated to jury determination as a purely factual matter without guidance or
definition. MacCormack, supra at 658-664, 672 N.E.2d 1.
[5] As evidence of unlawful retaliation, the plaintiff offered the mayor's order to Pike
to "get rid of" her and Pike's reprimand Of her for stating her grievances
directly to the mayor rather than going through channels; the way in which the
mayor treated her at the large meeting shortly after the newspaper story; the way in which
she was treated by Pike after their meeting about her complaint; and the mayor's
remarks as reported in the local newspaper story. Of these only the first may count as
retaliation. The statute does not actually use the word retaliation. That word is commonly
used by courts as shorthand for more detailed wording of antidiscrimination statutes. See,
e.g., Robinson v. Shell Oil Co., --- U.S - ----- 117 S.Ct. 843, 136 L.Ed.2d 808
(1997) (speaks of 11 retaliation," although 42 U.S.C. ' 2000e-3[a] 119941 makes unlawful
"discrimination against" employees because they "made a charge, testified,
assisted or participated" in enforcement under the statute). Rather, G.L. c.
151B, ' 4(4), makes it unlawful for
"any person ... to discharge, expel or otherwise discriminate against any person ...
because he has filed a complaint [under this chapter]," and, in 1989, the Legislature
added ' 4 (4A), which makes it unlawful
"for any person to coerce, intimidate, threaten or interfere with another person in
the exercise or enjoyment of any right granted or protected by this chapter." The
mayor's order to Pike and its communication to Bain together constituted a threat or
intimidation in the enjoyment of her right under the statute to bring a
complaint-unfounded though the jury found the complaint to be. (FN4)
*161 [6] The other instances brought up by Bain, however, cannot be allowed to be
considered unlawful retaliation. That the [424 Mass. 7661 mayor acted coldly toward her at
a meeting immediately after she had made serious charges against him or that his
"body language" betokened hostility to her, or that Pike "second-guessed
her" are the kind of subjective and intangible impressions that must not be
considered in making out a case under the statute. It is simply too easy to imagine such
acts in complete good faith, not to mention the possibility of their being concocted. Such
vague and impressionistic elements have no place in defining the standards for legal
intervention in the often fraught and delicate domain of personnel relations. See Lewis
v. Gillette Co., 22 F3d 22, 23-25 (1st Cir.1994) ("watching,"
"staring," and "gawking" at the plaintiff not actionable under
Title VII). As we said in MacCormack v. Boston Edison Co., supra at 663-664, 672
N.E.2d 1 (1996) (directed verdict on retaliation appropriate):
"[The plaintiff's] remaining complaints--which are the subject of the retaliation
claim--amount to no more than subjective feelings of disappointment and disillusionment.
He offered no objective evidence that he had been disadvantaged in respect to salary,
grade, or other objective terms and conditions of employment. To buttress his position
that the alterations in his work assignments were a demotion, [the plaintiff] offered the
testimony of a secretary ... where he worked that she considered him to be second in
command. But this too was merely a subjective impression ......
[7] What we most emphatically cannot countenance as an instance of retaliation is the
mayor's response in the local newspaper to the charges against him. The newspaper quoted
Bain's serious and damaging charges against the mayor, an elected official. He was
entitled to respond in the same forum, to defend himself and to state what political
judgments seemed appropriate so tong as they were not defarnatory-which these were
not. The plaintiff argues that decisions of the Massachusetts Commission Against
Discrimination (commission) have concluded precisely what she claims here, We doubt that
the proceedings she cites stand for this proposition, but, even if they did, the
proposition cannot be maintained. Although the commission's interpretations of the
antidiscrimination laws are entitled to deference, its interpretations are subject to
constitutional guarantees of freedom of [424 Mass. 767] speech. The interest in remedying
discrimination is weighty but not so weighty as to justify what amounts to a restriction
on core political speech.
C
[8] [9] We consider two other claims with respect to the award of
punitive damages. First, the city contends that since the jury found the plaintiff was not
entitled to compensatory damages, the award of punitive damages was inappropriate. (FN5)
But there is no requirement in our law that punitive damages may only be awarded if there
is an award of compensatory damages. The only authority to which the city points us,
Leardi v. Brown, 394 Mass. 151, 474 N.E.2d 1094 (1985), stands for the quite different
proposition that there can be no double or treble damages under G.L. c. 93A, in the
absence of actual damages. It is a mathematical truth that a multiple of zero is zero, but
the provision for punitive damages under the third paragraph of G.L. c. 151B, ' 9, as
it relates to sex discrimination is not expressed in terms of a multiple of actual
damages. By the fourth paragraph, punitive damages in cases of age discrimination, by
contrast, are explicitly required to be calculated as double or triple actual damages.
Given the purpose of punitive damages, there is no reason in principle to exclude them,
where a defendant's *162 conduct warrants condemnation and deterrence, even though the
plaintiff may-perhaps by virtue of her own hardiness or diligence--have suffered no actual
damages or mitigated them to nothing. See Contardo v. Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner
& Smith, Inc., 753 F.Supp. 406 (D.Mass.1990) (punitive damages of $250,000 allowed
in conjunction with compensatory damages of $1 in suit under c. 151B). (FN6) Cf. King
v. Macri, 993 F.2d 294, 297-299 (2d Cir.1993) (punitive damages in absence of
compensatory damages in suit under 42 U.S.C. ' 1983 [19941 affirmed).
[10] [424 Mass. 768] The city also argues that the damage award of $100,000 was excessive
and thus in violation of the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United
State Constitution. See BMW of No. Am. v. Gore, --- U.S. ----, ----, 116 S.Ct.
1589, 1595, 134 L.Ed.2d 809 (1996). For purposes of the Constitution, of course, the
definition of the Commonwealth as a person in G.L. c. 151B, ' 1(1), is quite irrelevant. The Fourteenth
Amendment protects persons against exercises of State power; it has never been
applied--and its text would hardly permit that it he so applied-to protect the state or
its political subdivisions against persons. See South Carolina v. Katzenbach, 383
U.S. 301, 323-324, 86 S.Ct. 803, 816, 15 L.Ed.2d 769 (1966) ("The word 'person' in
the context of the due process clause of the Fifth Amendment cannot, by any reasonable
mode of interpretation, be expanded to encompass the States of the Union, and to our
knowledge this has never been done by any court"); Aguayo v. Richardson, 473
F.2d 1090, 1100-1101 (2d Cir.1973), cert. denied sub nom. Aguayo v. Weinberger, 414
U.S. 1146, 94 S.Ct. 900, 39 L.Ed.2d 101 (1974) ("a city would clearly lack standing
to raise due process claims ... relating to its citizens"); Sault Ste. Marie v.
Andrus, 532 F.Supp. 157, 167 (D.D.C.1980) ("It is well settled that a
municipality is a creature of the state legislature for the exercise of such powers as the
state sees fit.... It is difficult to imagine how a municipality can be a 'person' under
the Fifth Amendment if its progenitor, the state, cannot be"). But cf. Santa Clara
v. Andrus, 572 F.2d 660, 675 (9th Cir.), cert. denied, 439 U.S. 859, 99 S.Ct. 176,
177, 58 L.Ed.2d 167 (1978) ("by no means convinced" municipality not person
under due process clause of Fifth Amendment).
[11] All this is not to say, however, that trial courts, subject to supervision by an
appellate court, should not scrutinize punitive damage awards against the Commonwealth to
assure that they are not excessive or irrational. See Honda Motor Co. v. Oberg, 512
U.S. 415, 114 S.Ct. 2331, 129 L.Ed.2d 336 (1994), cert. denied, --- U.S. ----, 116 S.Ct.
1847, 134 L.Ed.2d 948 (1996) (common law basis for appellate review of punitive damage
awards); Fact Concerts, Inc. v. Newport, 626 F.2d 1060, 1064 (1st Cir.1980), rev'd
on other grounds, 453 U.S. 247, 101 S.Ct. 2748, 69 L.Ed.2d 616 (1981) (trial court
correctly ordered remittitur or new trial on punitive damages against municipality on the
ground [424 Mass. 769] that damages were excessive). We do not think, however, that an
award of $100,000, even in the absence of any compensatory harm, would necessarily exceed
the norms of rationality. See TXO Prod. Co rp. v.
Alliance Resources Corp., 509 U.S. 443, 460-462, 113 S.Ct. 2711, 2721-2723, 125
L.Ed.2d 366 (1993) (affirmed punitive damages of $10 million with compensatory damages of
$19,000 and held that courts may consider the potential damages which could result from
the defendant's bad acts and not just the harm in the case that actually occurred),
III
[12] As we have said, the award of punitive damages cannot be left to
the unguided discretion of the jury. The same considerations that require scrutiny and
control by the trial judge or a reviewing court to meet the requirements of due process,
see BMW of No. Am., supra; Honda Motor Co. v. Oberg, 512 U.S. 415, 114 S.Ct. 2331,
129 L.Ed.2d 336 (1994), apply here even though * 163. no constitutional due process rights
are implicated. In the BMW case, the Supreme Court of Alabama reduced an award of
punitive damages from $4 to $2 million dollars, because the jury had been allowed to
consider legally irrelevant elements in arriving at their award. BMW of No. Am., supra
at ----- 116 S.Ct. at 1595. The same has happened here. The jury were allowed to consider
the mayor's defense in the press of his actions and his opinions about Bain's motivations,
as well as Bain's subjective impressions regarding the mayor's coldness to her, his
"body language," and Pike's "second guessing" of her decisions. All
these were not proper items for consideration in arriving at an award of punitive damages.
Accordingly, we remand the case to the Superior Court for a new trial on punitive damages.
(FN7)
So ordered.
FN1. The controversies involved her purchasing Ford Explorer vehicles for her
department, a costly refurbishing of her office, and her filing a claim of sexual
harassment against one of her employees. Markel testified that this was most unusual,
because such claims tend to be made by employees against their managers.
FN2. The Massachusetts Tort Claims Act, since 1994, contains language which undercuts
this argument. General Laws c. 258, ' 10, as amended by St.1993, c. 495, ' 57,
specifically states that "[n]othing in this section shall be construed to modify or
repeal the applicability of any existing statute that limits, controls or affects the
liability of public employers or entities."
FN3. The defendant argues that we should follow Newport v. Fact Concerts, Inc., 453
U.S. 247, 101 S.Ct. 2748, 69 L.Ed.2d 616 (1981), which holds that 42 U.S.C. ' 1983
(1994) does not abrogate the immunity from punitive damages which municipalities
have traditionally enjoyed absent clear waiver. Section 1983, however, is written in a
much less detailed way, neither defining "person" nor expressly authorizing
punitive damages. Thus, the Court was correct in holding that Congress had not made a
clear statement about municipalities' liability for punitive damages. In contrast, G.L. c.
151B explicitly defines person and employer to include municipalities and explicitly
authorizes punitive damages without distinguishing among persons or employers subject to
liability.
FN4. Although we often look to analogous Federal law in construing our own
antidiscrimination statute, Tate v. Department of Mental Health, 419 Mass. 356,
361, 645 N.E.2d 1159 (1995), Cox v. New England Tel. & Tel. Co., 414 Mass. 375,
382, 607 N.E.2d 1035 (1993), in this case, our c. 151B, ' 4(4A)
(may not "coerce, intimidate, threaten, or interfere"), is much more specific
than Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. '
20OOe-3 (1994) (may not "discriminate against"), and we may well find liability
under c. 151B even if the same conduct would not be actionable under Title VII.
FN5. The city also argues that the award of punitive damages was improper because the
plaintiff only asked for punitive damages in connection with the equal rights claim, which
was dismissed. Under the request for relief under the civil rights count, the plaintiff
asked for "compensatory and exemplary damages" while under the c. 151B claim,
the plaintiff asked more generically for "damages ... and whatever further relief the
Court deems appropriate. " A request for punitive damages may be inferred from this
generic request. The city has shown us no authority for requiring a specific request for
punitive damages, and we decline to impose such a requirement.
FN6. We did, as the defendant points out, decline to follow Contardo v. Merrill
Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc., 753 F. Supp. 406 (D. Mass. 1990), in Fontaine
v. Ebtec Corp., 415 Mass. 309, 320 n. 11, 613 N.E.2d 881 (1993), but which decision
was based on an incorrect application of our law on retroactivity, not because we found
that punitive damages in conjunction with nominal damages were inappropriate.
FN7. The plaintiff has filed a motion to amend her appellate brief to include a request
for appellate attorney's fees. The defendant has assented to that motion, and we grant it.
We deny the plaintiff's request for the fees.
Other Reported Decisions:
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